An enterprise federated architecture intends to mirror the structure of the organisation, aiming to provide better support for both new and legacy applications within a distributed environment and facilitating data exchange between applications to support information integration. Under this architectural form, the organisation's information systems are separated out into autonomous co-operating application clusters, each connected to a message-oriented federal highway acting as the vehicle for inter-domain communication. The federated approach intends to avoid unnecessary coupling (in the distributed computing sense) by grouping highly interdependent modules and applications into domains, whilst minimising the strength of inter-domain connections. This article presents how to design a distributed federated architectural form using three architectural patterns, and shows how these three patterns are to be connected to comply with the specification of the the federated form.
CITATION STYLE
Fernandez, G., Zhao, L., & Wijegunaratne, I. (2003). Patterns for federated architecture. Journal of Object Technology, 2(3), 135–149. https://doi.org/10.5381/jot.2003.2.3.a4
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.